Archive for the ‘Iraq’ Category

EBRD shareholders back expansion to sub-Saharan Africa and Iraq – EBRD

Read Resolution

The Board of Governors of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has approved amendments to the Banks statutes to enable the limited and incremental expansion of its operations to sub-Saharan Africa and Iraq.

The decision, taken at the EBRDs 2023 Annual Meeting in Samarkand, reflects the growing economic links between the Banks current countries of operations and sub-Saharan Africa and Iraq and its potential for developing the private sector in those economies.

This is a very important moment for the Bank, EBRD President Odile Renaud-Basso said. Our distinct business model provides real added value which can complement the work of existing development partners and accelerate transition in sub-Saharan Africa and Iraq. This decision also reaffirms our shareholders commitment to the global development agenda.

Under the terms of the resolution adopted today, applications for recipient country status will be considered after the ratification and entry into force of the relevant amendment to Article 1 of the EBRDs statutes. Any applications received would be assessed through the Banks established governance procedures.

As such, the Bank does not envisage making any investments in these new countries before 2025, allowing more time to prepare for successful delivery when it does become operational there.

From 2025 to 2030, the EBRD will be able to invest in up to six countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

Preparatory analysis undertaken by the Bank has showed that the EBRDs mandate and business model would fit most appropriately in Benin, Cte dIvoire, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and Senegal, should they wish to apply. These six countries will be formally notified of the Governors decision.

Iraq will join the Banks southern and eastern Mediterranean (SEMED) region (Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia and the West Bank and Gaza), to which the country has strong economic links.

The EBRD started working in the SEMED region in 2011, where it has so far invested close to 19billion in 363 projects supporting the private sector and sustainable development.

The Banks most urgent and immediate priority remains supporting Ukraine, where the EBRD is the largest institutional investor, having committed to deploying 3 billion in 2022-23.

Follow this link:
EBRD shareholders back expansion to sub-Saharan Africa and Iraq - EBRD

20 Years Later: Mercure reflects on days embedded in Iraq war with … – WTMJ

MILWAUKEE Wisconsins Afternoon News host John Mercure has worn many hats in his journalism career, but few compared with his time embedded with a U.S. military group during the war in Iraq.

On May 15, 2023, which marked 20 years since his visit to Iraq, Mercure welcomed Cpt. Dan Buttery onto WAN to discuss their time together overseas and Butterys role as President and CEO for the Milwaukee County War Memorial Center.

Mercure explained that he applied with the Pentagon to be the lead TV journalist to represent the state of Wisconsin in Iraq. Thanks to his track record as an investigative journalist and connections with state politicians, he was selected to go into the heat of action along with a photographer to capture an authentic, first-person perspective in Iraq.

Many of the individuals in the unit he joined, which was led by Cpt. Buttery, were reserves who were activated due to the severity of the war.

They recalled some of the more intense moments of his stay, including a time when their Humvee came under fire while on the road. Cpt. Buttery explained that he tried to lighten the mood by suggesting they were bottle rockets until the group came upon a destroyed vehicle that was targeted by similar attacks.

Thats when I realized it was a war, Mercure said. We werent just playing something on TV.

Mercure also recalled another moment when he stood atop a tower overlooking an airfield with his photographer when guards rushed to the tower and warned them of a serious threat.

Suddenly, guards at the bottom of the tower said You got to get down, you got to get down. We think theres a sniper out there, hell take a shot at you in that tower, Mercure recalled. That was another moment that was like woah.'

The conversation turned to the War Memorial Center, which needs public support. Despite it being a private nonprofit, Milwaukee County owns the structure itself. They operated through a public/private partnership in which Buttery said his team funds approx. 80% of the operation.

To learn more about the War Memorial Center, click here.

TOP HEADLINES FROM THE WTMJ NEWS TEAM:

READ: Funeral for slain Wisconsin sheriffs deputy draws 3,000 mourners

Continue reading here:
20 Years Later: Mercure reflects on days embedded in Iraq war with ... - WTMJ

What the Iraq War can teach U.S. about avoiding a quagmire in … – Japan Today

Leaked Pentagon papers showed in early April that the U.S. is allegedly following the inner workings of Russias intelligence operations and is alsospying on Ukraine, adding a new dimension to the United States involvement in the Ukraine war.

While the U.S. hasnot actually declared waragainst Russia, the documents show that it continues to support Ukraine withmilitary intelligenceas well asmoney and weaponsagainst the Russian invasion.

There isno end in sightto the war between Ukraine and Russia nor to U.S. involvement. While it is far from the first time that the U.S. became a third party to war, this scenario brings the Iraq War, in particular, to mind.

I am ascholar of international relations and an expert on international conflicts. A comparison with the Iraq War, I believe, offers a useful way to look at the case of Ukraine.

The Iraq and Ukraine wars have notable differences from a U.S. foreign policy perspective chiefly, thousands of American soldiers died fighting in Iraq, while the U.S. does not have any ground troops in Ukraine. But assessing the Iraq War, and its long aftermath, can still help articulate concerns about the United States getting involved in intense violence in another faraway place.

Here are three key points to understand.

1. Intervention doesnt guarantee success

Around the time former President George W Bush announced the U.S. would invade Iraq in 2003, Osama bin Laden, the wealthy Saudi Arabian Islamist who orchestrated the Sept 11, 2001, attacks,remained at large. While not obviously connected, the fact that bin Laden continued to evade the U.S. contributed to a general sense of anger at hostile regimes. In particular, Saddam Hussein defied the U.S. and its allies.

The Iraqi dictatorcontinued to evade inspectionsby the United Nations watchdog group the International Atomic Energy Agency, giving the impression that he had weapons of mass destruction. This proved maddening to the U.S. and its allies asthe cat and mouse game dragged on.

Bush reportedly had intense concerns aboutwhether Saddam could use alleged weaponsof mass destruction to attack the U.S., causing even more harm than 9/11 did.

A U.S.-led coalition of countries that included the United Kingdom and Australia invaded Iraq in March 2003. The coalition of the willing, as it became known,won a quick victoryand toppled Saddams regime.

Bush initially enjoyed aspike in public supportimmediately after the invasion, but his polls shortly after experienced adownward trajectoryas the war dragged on.

However, the U.S. showed very little understanding of the politics, society and other important aspects of the country that it had taken the lead in occupying and then trying to rebuild.

Many decisions, most notablydisbanding of the Iraqi Armyin May 2003, revealed poor judgment and even outright ignorance because, with the sudden removal of Iraqi security forces, intense civildisorder ensued.

Disbanding the army caused insurgent militant forces to come out into the open. The fighting intensified among different Iraqi groups and escalated intoa civil war, which ended in 2017.

Today, Iraq continues to be politically unstable and isnot any closerto becoming a democracy than it was before the invasion.

2. Personal vendettas cannot justify a war

During his 24-year regime, Saddamlived an extravagant lifestylecoupled with oppression of civilians andpolitical opponents. He engaged ingenocide of Kurdish peoplein Iraq. Saddam was finallyexecuted by his own people in 2006, after U.S. forces captured him.

Putin is equally notorious and even more dangerous. He has a long track record ofviolent oppressionagainst his people and has benefited from leading one of the worldsmost corrupt governments.

He also actually possesses weapons of mass destruction and hasthreatened multiple times to use themon foreign countries.Saddamand Putin have also both been thedirect targetsof U.S. political leaders,who displayed a fixationon toppling these foreign adversaries, whichwas evident long beforethe U.S. actually became involved in the Iraq and Ukraine wars.

The United States support for Ukraine is understandable because that country is fighting a defensive war withhorrific civilian casualties. Backing Ukraine also makes sense from the standpoint of U.S. national security it helps push back against an expansionist Russia that increasinglyis aligned with China.

At the same time, I believe that it is important to keep U.S. involvement in this war within limits that reflect national interests.

3. It can divide the country

The Iraq War resulted in a rise in intensepartisanship in the U.S. over foreign policy. In addition, recent opinion polls about the Iraq Warshow that most Americans do not think that the invasionmade the U.S. any safer.

Now, the U.S. faces rising public skepticism about getting involved in the Ukraine war, anotherexpensive overseas commitment.

Polls released in January 2023 show that the percentage of Americans whothink the U.S. is providing too much aidto Ukraine has grown in recent months. About 26% of American adults said in late 2022 that the U.S. isgiving too muchto the Ukraine war, according to Pew Research Group. But three-fourths of those polled still supported the U.S. engagement.

The average Americanknows little to nothingabout Iraq or Ukraine. Patience obviously can grow thin when U.S. support for foreign wars becomes ever more expensive and the threat of retaliation, even by way of tactical nuclear weapons, remains in the realm of possibility. Aid to Ukraine is likely to become embroiled in the rapidly escalating conflict in Washington over the debt ceiling.

On the flip side, if the U.S. does not offer sufficient support for Ukraine to fend of Russian attacks and maintain its independence, adversaries such as Russia, China and Iran may feel encouraged to be aggressive in other places.

I believe that the comparison between the wars in Iraq and Ukraine makes it clear that U.S. leadership should clearly identify the underlying goals of its national security to the American public while determining the amount and type of support that it will give to Ukraine.

While many people believe that Ukraine deserves support against Russian aggression, current policy should not ignore past experience, and the Iraq War tells a cautionary tale.

Patrick James is a professor of International Relations, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

More:
What the Iraq War can teach U.S. about avoiding a quagmire in ... - Japan Today

Iraq’s only Anglican priest visits US to inform Episcopalians about … – Episcopal News Service

The Rev. Faiz Basheer Jerjes embraces some of the children who attend school at St. Georges Church in Baghdad, Iraq. Photo: Courtesy of Stand With Iraqi Christians

[Episcopal News Service] The Rev. Faiz BasheerJerjes, the only Anglican priest serving the only Anglican Church in Iraq, is in the middle of a visit to the United States, where hes sharing the story of his church and its ministries through a series of events.

Jerjes is accompanied by Sinan Hannah Karakash, chief administrator of St. Georges Church. Their trip is co-sponsored by The Episcopal Churchs Office of Global Partnerships and Stand With Iraqi Christians, an Episcopal nonprofit that serves to financially and spiritually support Christians in Iraq.

[Stand With Iraqi Christians] is thrilled to welcome Canon Faiz and Sinan Hannah to the United States, primarily to raise awareness within The Episcopal Church of the powerful ministries of our church in Iraq, Buck Blanchard, co-chair of SWIC, told Episcopal News Service. Their work provides healing to the people of Iraq, both spiritually and practically.

On May 17, The Episcopal Churchs Office of Global Partnerships will host a webinar at 2 p.m. Eastern. Its an opportunity to listen to Jerjes speak about St. Georges ministries and how to curb religious extremism in Iraq, which is a predominantly Shia Muslim country with multiple religious minority groups, including Yazidis and Zoroastrians in addition to Christians.

Jerjes was born in Baghdad into a Syriac Christian family. He was ordained a deacon in 2011 and became the first Iraqi national to be ordained an Anglican priest a year later. St. Georges Church is part of the Anglican Diocese of Cyprus and the Gulf.

St. Georges Church in Baghdad is home to a couple of hundred Christians. Jerjes said that supporting Iraqi Christians will help minimize their suffering, and they may stay in [Iraq] because they will have a decent life.

I have chosen [to visit] the United States because the United States is directly involved with the Iraqi situation; the whole system has changed since the moment the United States started the war in 2003, Jerjes told ENS through Karakash, who is serving as his interpreter. I am looking to find resources for St. George so that we can have a Christian community exactly as it was in the past.

An estimated 1.5 million Christians lived in Iraq before the U.S.-led war in Iraq started in 2003. Over the last 20 years much of the Christian community has fled Iraq to escape violence and persecution, and now that number is approximated to be in the hundreds of thousands or less and continues to dwindle even though the war officially ended in 2011. St. Georges Church was badly damaged by bombings during the war. The COVID-19 pandemic and ISIS have exacerbated the situation.

Through its church-based interfaith ministries, St. Georges Church provides free medical and dental care to the community, as well as an elementary school for children. The church also has a resource center with books and computer access for students, and it frequently hosts interfaith activities for the community.

Hearing Jerjes story firsthand about St. Georges Church in the context of ministry will help develop relationships as Christians learn from one another, the Rev. Paul Feheley, The Episcopal Churchs Middle East partnership officer, told ENS. He said he hopes the new dialogue will lead to empathy.

Its not just about [Westerners] shifting dollars to the church in Iraq, but its also about developing these relationships, Feheley said. I recently worshiped with people at St. Georges; it was all in Arabic, a language I dont speak, but nevertheless because theres a unity about Eucharist that goes around the world, it was easy to follow, and I knew where in the Mass they were Like the invitation from Jesus to the disciples in John chapter one, Come and see.

Jerjes is visiting several Episcopal churches, non-governmental organizations, government officials and other organizations this month to inform people about the struggles Christians face in Iraq and share how they can help support St. Georges ministries.

While in Washington, D.C., last week, Jerjes spoke at in-person forums at Washington National Cathedral and Church of the Ascension and Saint Agnes; he also spoke at Philadelphia Episcopal Cathedral in Pennsylvaniaon May 15. On May 21, he will speak at Saint Bartholomews Church and on May 22 Church of the Holy Trinity, both in New York City.

Feheley said that both donating money to St. Georges Church and reaching out to members of Congress as legislation affecting people in Iraq comes through are examples of tangible ways to help the Iraqi people.

If youre going to be a Christian, then you cant ignore the many Biblical things Jesus said about caring for other people, Feheley said. Its very easy to comfortably sit back and do nothing, but we cant ignore what the call is were commissioned to do by baptism, what were called to do by the eucharist. So, we need to use a faith-in-action approach to prayer and supporting the people in Iraq.

For more information on how to help, click here.

-Shireen Korkzan is a reporter and assistant editor for Episcopal News Service. She can be reached at skorkan@episcopalchurch.org.

Continue reading here:
Iraq's only Anglican priest visits US to inform Episcopalians about ... - Episcopal News Service

Video of Street Play In Iraq Peddled As ISIS Sex Slave Auction | BOOM – BOOM

A video of a street play from Iraq is being shared online with a false claim that it shows a sex slave auction organised by terrorist group ISIS.

BOOM found that the video was staged for social awareness, and was part of an art performance shot in Erbil, Iraq.

The video shows a man approaching women dressed in burqas, removing their niqabs to see their faces and putting them back after. The video is being shared with the claim that the women are being enslaved, and the only people allowed to see their faces is their owner. One caption on Twitter reads, "This is sex slave market in 21st century by ISIS. If "liberals & moderate muslims" put half of the energy they put in playing victim card & dissemination of narrative of Islamophobia, these "slave markets" will end for sure. But, they will say ISIS doesn't represent Islam."

BOOM had previously debunked another video, made to raise awareness about sex slavery. A similar video showing a mock sex slave trade, made for spreading awareness, was being shared with false claims by several news channels and right-wing groups. Read our fact-check here.

Click here to view the tweet and here for an archive.

This video is being shared in the backdrop of controversial Hindi film The Kerala Story, which claims to depict the plight of women from the state who have been abducted by ISIS and trafficked to regions such as Afghanistan and Syria. Read more about the filmmakers' claims here.

Click here to view the tweet and here for an archive.

The post is also circulating on Facebook.

Click here to view and here for an archive.

BOOM found that the video shows a street play titled 'The Unheard Screams of The Ezidkhan Angles', organised in March 2023 in Erbil, Iraq.

A reverse image searchof some of the key visuals from the video on Google led us to a TikTok video uploaded by user Zhyar M Barzani. The post, uploaded on May 7, 2023, was shared with the caption, "By : Aryan Rafiq Art performans The Unheard Screams Of The Ezidkhan Angels 2023." The first 22 seconds of the video are an exact match to our viral video.

Click here to view.

Taking a cue from this caption, we looked for more details about this performance and found the Facebook profile of Aryan Rafiq, the director, who had shared an invitation for the performance on March 8. The post also mentioned the date and time of the event-- March 8 from 3 pm onwards, and the location was near Erbil Citadel.

Aryan Rafiq routinely posts about their art performances and artworks that highlight the atrocities inflicted on Iraqi and Iranian women.

Further, we geolocated the venue, Erbil Citadel in Kurdistan, Iraq and found that the architecture, specifically, the arches in the structure matched the ones in the viral video. Here is a comparison:

We also noticed that several members of the audience were recording the performance on their phones:

BOOM has reached out to Aryan Rafiq, the director of the performance via Facebook. This story will be updated upon receiving a response.

Continue reading here:
Video of Street Play In Iraq Peddled As ISIS Sex Slave Auction | BOOM - BOOM